<h2><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN> The Eye of Apollo </h2>
<p>That singular smoky sparkle, at once a confusion and a transparency, which
is the strange secret of the Thames, was changing more and more from its
grey to its glittering extreme as the sun climbed to the zenith over
Westminster, and two men crossed Westminster Bridge. One man was very tall
and the other very short; they might even have been fantastically compared
to the arrogant clock-tower of Parliament and the humbler humped shoulders
of the Abbey, for the short man was in clerical dress. The official
description of the tall man was M. Hercule Flambeau, private detective,
and he was going to his new offices in a new pile of flats facing the
Abbey entrance. The official description of the short man was the Reverend
J. Brown, attached to St. Francis Xavier’s Church, Camberwell, and he was
coming from a Camberwell deathbed to see the new offices of his friend.</p>
<p>The building was American in its sky-scraping altitude, and American also
in the oiled elaboration of its machinery of telephones and lifts. But it
was barely finished and still understaffed; only three tenants had moved
in; the office just above Flambeau was occupied, as also was the office
just below him; the two floors above that and the three floors below were
entirely bare. But the first glance at the new tower of flats caught
something much more arresting. Save for a few relics of scaffolding, the
one glaring object was erected outside the office just above Flambeau’s.
It was an enormous gilt effigy of the human eye, surrounded with rays of
gold, and taking up as much room as two or three of the office windows.</p>
<p>“What on earth is that?” asked Father Brown, and stood still. “Oh, a new
religion,” said Flambeau, laughing; “one of those new religions that
forgive your sins by saying you never had any. Rather like Christian
Science, I should think. The fact is that a fellow calling himself Kalon
(I don’t know what his name is, except that it can’t be that) has taken
the flat just above me. I have two lady typewriters underneath me, and
this enthusiastic old humbug on top. He calls himself the New Priest of
Apollo, and he worships the sun.”</p>
<p>“Let him look out,” said Father Brown. “The sun was the cruellest of all
the gods. But what does that monstrous eye mean?”</p>
<p>“As I understand it, it is a theory of theirs,” answered Flambeau, “that a
man can endure anything if his mind is quite steady. Their two great
symbols are the sun and the open eye; for they say that if a man were
really healthy he could stare at the sun.”</p>
<p>“If a man were really healthy,” said Father Brown, “he would not bother to
stare at it.”</p>
<p>“Well, that’s all I can tell you about the new religion,” went on Flambeau
carelessly. “It claims, of course, that it can cure all physical
diseases.”</p>
<p>“Can it cure the one spiritual disease?” asked Father Brown, with a
serious curiosity.</p>
<p>“And what is the one spiritual disease?” asked Flambeau, smiling.</p>
<p>“Oh, thinking one is quite well,” said his friend.</p>
<p>Flambeau was more interested in the quiet little office below him than in
the flamboyant temple above. He was a lucid Southerner, incapable of
conceiving himself as anything but a Catholic or an atheist; and new
religions of a bright and pallid sort were not much in his line. But
humanity was always in his line, especially when it was good-looking;
moreover, the ladies downstairs were characters in their way. The office
was kept by two sisters, both slight and dark, one of them tall and
striking. She had a dark, eager and aquiline profile, and was one of those
women whom one always thinks of in profile, as of the clean-cut edge of
some weapon. She seemed to cleave her way through life. She had eyes of
startling brilliancy, but it was the brilliancy of steel rather than of
diamonds; and her straight, slim figure was a shade too stiff for its
grace. Her younger sister was like her shortened shadow, a little greyer,
paler, and more insignificant. They both wore a business-like black, with
little masculine cuffs and collars. There are thousands of such curt,
strenuous ladies in the offices of London, but the interest of these lay
rather in their real than their apparent position.</p>
<p>For Pauline Stacey, the elder, was actually the heiress of a crest and
half a county, as well as great wealth; she had been brought up in castles
and gardens, before a frigid fierceness (peculiar to the modern woman) had
driven her to what she considered a harsher and a higher existence. She
had not, indeed, surrendered her money; in that there would have been a
romantic or monkish abandon quite alien to her masterful utilitarianism.
She held her wealth, she would say, for use upon practical social objects.
Part of it she had put into her business, the nucleus of a model
typewriting emporium; part of it was distributed in various leagues and
causes for the advancement of such work among women. How far Joan, her
sister and partner, shared this slightly prosaic idealism no one could be
very sure. But she followed her leader with a dog-like affection which was
somehow more attractive, with its touch of tragedy, than the hard, high
spirits of the elder. For Pauline Stacey had nothing to say to tragedy;
she was understood to deny its existence.</p>
<p>Her rigid rapidity and cold impatience had amused Flambeau very much on
the first occasion of his entering the flats. He had lingered outside the
lift in the entrance hall waiting for the lift-boy, who generally conducts
strangers to the various floors. But this bright-eyed falcon of a girl had
openly refused to endure such official delay. She said sharply that she
knew all about the lift, and was not dependent on boys—or men
either. Though her flat was only three floors above, she managed in the
few seconds of ascent to give Flambeau a great many of her fundamental
views in an off-hand manner; they were to the general effect that she was
a modern working woman and loved modern working machinery. Her bright
black eyes blazed with abstract anger against those who rebuke mechanic
science and ask for the return of romance. Everyone, she said, ought to be
able to manage machines, just as she could manage the lift. She seemed
almost to resent the fact of Flambeau opening the lift-door for her; and
that gentleman went up to his own apartments smiling with somewhat mingled
feelings at the memory of such spit-fire self-dependence.</p>
<p>She certainly had a temper, of a snappy, practical sort; the gestures of
her thin, elegant hands were abrupt or even destructive.</p>
<p>Once Flambeau entered her office on some typewriting business, and found
she had just flung a pair of spectacles belonging to her sister into the
middle of the floor and stamped on them. She was already in the rapids of
an ethical tirade about the “sickly medical notions” and the morbid
admission of weakness implied in such an apparatus. She dared her sister
to bring such artificial, unhealthy rubbish into the place again. She
asked if she was expected to wear wooden legs or false hair or glass eyes;
and as she spoke her eyes sparkled like the terrible crystal.</p>
<p>Flambeau, quite bewildered with this fanaticism, could not refrain from
asking Miss Pauline (with direct French logic) why a pair of spectacles
was a more morbid sign of weakness than a lift, and why, if science might
help us in the one effort, it might not help us in the other.</p>
<p>“That is so different,” said Pauline Stacey, loftily. “Batteries and
motors and all those things are marks of the force of man—yes, Mr.
Flambeau, and the force of woman, too! We shall take our turn at these
great engines that devour distance and defy time. That is high and
splendid—that is really science. But these nasty props and plasters
the doctors sell—why, they are just badges of poltroonery. Doctors
stick on legs and arms as if we were born cripples and sick slaves. But I
was free-born, Mr. Flambeau! People only think they need these things
because they have been trained in fear instead of being trained in power
and courage, just as the silly nurses tell children not to stare at the
sun, and so they can’t do it without blinking. But why among the stars
should there be one star I may not see? The sun is not my master, and I
will open my eyes and stare at him whenever I choose.”</p>
<p>“Your eyes,” said Flambeau, with a foreign bow, “will dazzle the sun.” He
took pleasure in complimenting this strange stiff beauty, partly because
it threw her a little off her balance. But as he went upstairs to his
floor he drew a deep breath and whistled, saying to himself: “So she has
got into the hands of that conjurer upstairs with his golden eye.” For,
little as he knew or cared about the new religion of Kalon, he had heard
of his special notion about sun-gazing.</p>
<p>He soon discovered that the spiritual bond between the floors above and
below him was close and increasing. The man who called himself Kalon was a
magnificent creature, worthy, in a physical sense, to be the pontiff of
Apollo. He was nearly as tall even as Flambeau, and very much better
looking, with a golden beard, strong blue eyes, and a mane flung back like
a lion’s. In structure he was the blonde beast of Nietzsche, but all this
animal beauty was heightened, brightened and softened by genuine intellect
and spirituality. If he looked like one of the great Saxon kings, he
looked like one of the kings that were also saints. And this despite the
cockney incongruity of his surroundings; the fact that he had an office
half-way up a building in Victoria Street; that the clerk (a commonplace
youth in cuffs and collars) sat in the outer room, between him and the
corridor; that his name was on a brass plate, and the gilt emblem of his
creed hung above his street, like the advertisement of an oculist. All
this vulgarity could not take away from the man called Kalon the vivid
oppression and inspiration that came from his soul and body. When all was
said, a man in the presence of this quack did feel in the presence of a
great man. Even in the loose jacket-suit of linen that he wore as a
workshop dress in his office he was a fascinating and formidable figure;
and when robed in the white vestments and crowned with the golden circlet,
in which he daily saluted the sun, he really looked so splendid that the
laughter of the street people sometimes died suddenly on their lips. For
three times in the day the new sun-worshipper went out on his little
balcony, in the face of all Westminster, to say some litany to his shining
lord: once at daybreak, once at sunset, and once at the shock of noon. And
it was while the shock of noon still shook faintly from the towers of
Parliament and parish church that Father Brown, the friend of Flambeau,
first looked up and saw the white priest of Apollo.</p>
<p>Flambeau had seen quite enough of these daily salutations of Phoebus, and
plunged into the porch of the tall building without even looking for his
clerical friend to follow. But Father Brown, whether from a professional
interest in ritual or a strong individual interest in tomfoolery, stopped
and stared up at the balcony of the sun-worshipper, just as he might have
stopped and stared up at a Punch and Judy. Kalon the Prophet was already
erect, with argent garments and uplifted hands, and the sound of his
strangely penetrating voice could be heard all the way down the busy
street uttering his solar litany. He was already in the middle of it; his
eyes were fixed upon the flaming disc. It is doubtful if he saw anything
or anyone on this earth; it is substantially certain that he did not see a
stunted, round-faced priest who, in the crowd below, looked up at him with
blinking eyes. That was perhaps the most startling difference between even
these two far divided men. Father Brown could not look at anything without
blinking; but the priest of Apollo could look on the blaze at noon without
a quiver of the eyelid.</p>
<p>“O sun,” cried the prophet, “O star that art too great to be allowed among
the stars! O fountain that flowest quietly in that secret spot that is
called space. White Father of all white unwearied things, white flames and
white flowers and white peaks. Father, who art more innocent than all thy
most innocent and quiet children; primal purity, into the peace of which—”</p>
<p>A rush and crash like the reversed rush of a rocket was cloven with a
strident and incessant yelling. Five people rushed into the gate of the
mansions as three people rushed out, and for an instant they all deafened
each other. The sense of some utterly abrupt horror seemed for a moment to
fill half the street with bad news—bad news that was all the worse
because no one knew what it was. Two figures remained still after the
crash of commotion: the fair priest of Apollo on the balcony above, and
the ugly priest of Christ below him.</p>
<p>At last the tall figure and titanic energy of Flambeau appeared in the
doorway of the mansions and dominated the little mob. Talking at the top
of his voice like a fog-horn, he told somebody or anybody to go for a
surgeon; and as he turned back into the dark and thronged entrance his
friend Father Brown dipped in insignificantly after him. Even as he ducked
and dived through the crowd he could still hear the magnificent melody and
monotony of the solar priest still calling on the happy god who is the
friend of fountains and flowers.</p>
<p>Father Brown found Flambeau and some six other people standing round the
enclosed space into which the lift commonly descended. But the lift had
not descended. Something else had descended; something that ought to have
come by a lift.</p>
<p>For the last four minutes Flambeau had looked down on it; had seen the
brained and bleeding figure of that beautiful woman who denied the
existence of tragedy. He had never had the slightest doubt that it was
Pauline Stacey; and, though he had sent for a doctor, he had not the
slightest doubt that she was dead.</p>
<p>He could not remember for certain whether he had liked her or disliked
her; there was so much both to like and dislike. But she had been a person
to him, and the unbearable pathos of details and habit stabbed him with
all the small daggers of bereavement. He remembered her pretty face and
priggish speeches with a sudden secret vividness which is all the
bitterness of death. In an instant like a bolt from the blue, like a
thunderbolt from nowhere, that beautiful and defiant body had been dashed
down the open well of the lift to death at the bottom. Was it suicide?
With so insolent an optimist it seemed impossible. Was it murder? But who
was there in those hardly inhabited flats to murder anybody? In a rush of
raucous words, which he meant to be strong and suddenly found weak, he
asked where was that fellow Kalon. A voice, habitually heavy, quiet and
full, assured him that Kalon for the last fifteen minutes had been away up
on his balcony worshipping his god. When Flambeau heard the voice, and
felt the hand of Father Brown, he turned his swarthy face and said
abruptly:</p>
<p>“Then, if he has been up there all the time, who can have done it?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” said the other, “we might go upstairs and find out. We have
half an hour before the police will move.”</p>
<p>Leaving the body of the slain heiress in charge of the surgeons, Flambeau
dashed up the stairs to the typewriting office, found it utterly empty,
and then dashed up to his own. Having entered that, he abruptly returned
with a new and white face to his friend.</p>
<p>“Her sister,” he said, with an unpleasant seriousness, “her sister seems
to have gone out for a walk.”</p>
<p>Father Brown nodded. “Or, she may have gone up to the office of that sun
man,” he said. “If I were you I should just verify that, and then let us
all talk it over in your office. No,” he added suddenly, as if remembering
something, “shall I ever get over that stupidity of mine? Of course, in
their office downstairs.”</p>
<p>Flambeau stared; but he followed the little father downstairs to the empty
flat of the Staceys, where that impenetrable pastor took a large
red-leather chair in the very entrance, from which he could see the stairs
and landings, and waited. He did not wait very long. In about four minutes
three figures descended the stairs, alike only in their solemnity. The
first was Joan Stacey, the sister of the dead woman—evidently she
had been upstairs in the temporary temple of Apollo; the second was the
priest of Apollo himself, his litany finished, sweeping down the empty
stairs in utter magnificence—something in his white robes, beard and
parted hair had the look of Dore’s Christ leaving the Pretorium; the third
was Flambeau, black browed and somewhat bewildered.</p>
<p>Miss Joan Stacey, dark, with a drawn face and hair prematurely touched
with grey, walked straight to her own desk and set out her papers with a
practical flap. The mere action rallied everyone else to sanity. If Miss
Joan Stacey was a criminal, she was a cool one. Father Brown regarded her
for some time with an odd little smile, and then, without taking his eyes
off her, addressed himself to somebody else.</p>
<p>“Prophet,” he said, presumably addressing Kalon, “I wish you would tell me
a lot about your religion.”</p>
<p>“I shall be proud to do it,” said Kalon, inclining his still crowned head,
“but I am not sure that I understand.”</p>
<p>“Why, it’s like this,” said Father Brown, in his frankly doubtful way: “We
are taught that if a man has really bad first principles, that must be
partly his fault. But, for all that, we can make some difference between a
man who insults his quite clear conscience and a man with a conscience
more or less clouded with sophistries. Now, do you really think that
murder is wrong at all?”</p>
<p>“Is this an accusation?” asked Kalon very quietly.</p>
<p>“No,” answered Brown, equally gently, “it is the speech for the defence.”</p>
<p>In the long and startled stillness of the room the prophet of Apollo
slowly rose; and really it was like the rising of the sun. He filled that
room with his light and life in such a manner that a man felt he could as
easily have filled Salisbury Plain. His robed form seemed to hang the
whole room with classic draperies; his epic gesture seemed to extend it
into grander perspectives, till the little black figure of the modern
cleric seemed to be a fault and an intrusion, a round, black blot upon
some splendour of Hellas.</p>
<p>“We meet at last, Caiaphas,” said the prophet. “Your church and mine are
the only realities on this earth. I adore the sun, and you the darkening
of the sun; you are the priest of the dying and I of the living God. Your
present work of suspicion and slander is worthy of your coat and creed.
All your church is but a black police; you are only spies and detectives
seeking to tear from men confessions of guilt, whether by treachery or
torture. You would convict men of crime, I would convict them of
innocence. You would convince them of sin, I would convince them of
virtue.</p>
<p>“Reader of the books of evil, one more word before I blow away your
baseless nightmares for ever. Not even faintly could you understand how
little I care whether you can convict me or no. The things you call
disgrace and horrible hanging are to me no more than an ogre in a child’s
toy-book to a man once grown up. You said you were offering the speech for
the defence. I care so little for the cloudland of this life that I will
offer you the speech for the prosecution. There is but one thing that can
be said against me in this matter, and I will say it myself. The woman
that is dead was my love and my bride; not after such manner as your tin
chapels call lawful, but by a law purer and sterner than you will ever
understand. She and I walked another world from yours, and trod palaces of
crystal while you were plodding through tunnels and corridors of brick.
Well, I know that policemen, theological and otherwise, always fancy that
where there has been love there must soon be hatred; so there you have the
first point made for the prosecution. But the second point is stronger; I
do not grudge it you. Not only is it true that Pauline loved me, but it is
also true that this very morning, before she died, she wrote at that table
a will leaving me and my new church half a million. Come, where are the
handcuffs? Do you suppose I care what foolish things you do with me? Penal
servitude will only be like waiting for her at a wayside station. The
gallows will only be going to her in a headlong car.”</p>
<p>He spoke with the brain-shaking authority of an orator, and Flambeau and
Joan Stacey stared at him in amazed admiration. Father Brown’s face seemed
to express nothing but extreme distress; he looked at the ground with one
wrinkle of pain across his forehead. The prophet of the sun leaned easily
against the mantelpiece and resumed:</p>
<p>“In a few words I have put before you the whole case against me—the
only possible case against me. In fewer words still I will blow it to
pieces, so that not a trace of it remains. As to whether I have committed
this crime, the truth is in one sentence: I could not have committed this
crime. Pauline Stacey fell from this floor to the ground at five minutes
past twelve. A hundred people will go into the witness-box and say that I
was standing out upon the balcony of my own rooms above from just before
the stroke of noon to a quarter-past—the usual period of my public
prayers. My clerk (a respectable youth from Clapham, with no sort of
connection with me) will swear that he sat in my outer office all the
morning, and that no communication passed through. He will swear that I
arrived a full ten minutes before the hour, fifteen minutes before any
whisper of the accident, and that I did not leave the office or the
balcony all that time. No one ever had so complete an alibi; I could
subpoena half Westminster. I think you had better put the handcuffs away
again. The case is at an end.</p>
<p>“But last of all, that no breath of this idiotic suspicion remain in the
air, I will tell you all you want to know. I believe I do know how my
unhappy friend came by her death. You can, if you choose, blame me for it,
or my faith and philosophy at least; but you certainly cannot lock me up.
It is well known to all students of the higher truths that certain adepts
and illuminati have in history attained the power of levitation—that
is, of being self-sustained upon the empty air. It is but a part of that
general conquest of matter which is the main element in our occult wisdom.
Poor Pauline was of an impulsive and ambitious temper. I think, to tell
the truth, she thought herself somewhat deeper in the mysteries than she
was; and she has often said to me, as we went down in the lift together,
that if one’s will were strong enough, one could float down as harmlessly
as a feather. I solemnly believe that in some ecstasy of noble thoughts
she attempted the miracle. Her will, or faith, must have failed her at the
crucial instant, and the lower law of matter had its horrible revenge.
There is the whole story, gentlemen, very sad and, as you think, very
presumptuous and wicked, but certainly not criminal or in any way
connected with me. In the short-hand of the police-courts, you had better
call it suicide. I shall always call it heroic failure for the advance of
science and the slow scaling of heaven.”</p>
<p>It was the first time Flambeau had ever seen Father Brown vanquished. He
still sat looking at the ground, with a painful and corrugated brow, as if
in shame. It was impossible to avoid the feeling which the prophet’s
winged words had fanned, that here was a sullen, professional suspecter of
men overwhelmed by a prouder and purer spirit of natural liberty and
health. At last he said, blinking as if in bodily distress: “Well, if that
is so, sir, you need do no more than take the testamentary paper you spoke
of and go. I wonder where the poor lady left it.”</p>
<p>“It will be over there on her desk by the door, I think,” said Kalon, with
that massive innocence of manner that seemed to acquit him wholly. “She
told me specially she would write it this morning, and I actually saw her
writing as I went up in the lift to my own room.”</p>
<p>“Was her door open then?” asked the priest, with his eye on the corner of
the matting.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Kalon calmly.</p>
<p>“Ah! it has been open ever since,” said the other, and resumed his silent
study of the mat.</p>
<p>“There is a paper over here,” said the grim Miss Joan, in a somewhat
singular voice. She had passed over to her sister’s desk by the doorway,
and was holding a sheet of blue foolscap in her hand. There was a sour
smile on her face that seemed unfit for such a scene or occasion, and
Flambeau looked at her with a darkening brow.</p>
<p>Kalon the prophet stood away from the paper with that loyal
unconsciousness that had carried him through. But Flambeau took it out of
the lady’s hand, and read it with the utmost amazement. It did, indeed,
begin in the formal manner of a will, but after the words “I give and
bequeath all of which I die possessed” the writing abruptly stopped with a
set of scratches, and there was no trace of the name of any legatee.
Flambeau, in wonder, handed this truncated testament to his clerical
friend, who glanced at it and silently gave it to the priest of the sun.</p>
<p>An instant afterwards that pontiff, in his splendid sweeping draperies,
had crossed the room in two great strides, and was towering over Joan
Stacey, his blue eyes standing from his head.</p>
<p>“What monkey tricks have you been playing here?” he cried. “That’s not all
Pauline wrote.”</p>
<p>They were startled to hear him speak in quite a new voice, with a Yankee
shrillness in it; all his grandeur and good English had fallen from him
like a cloak.</p>
<p>“That is the only thing on her desk,” said Joan, and confronted him
steadily with the same smile of evil favour.</p>
<p>Of a sudden the man broke out into blasphemies and cataracts of
incredulous words. There was something shocking about the dropping of his
mask; it was like a man’s real face falling off.</p>
<p>“See here!” he cried in broad American, when he was breathless with
cursing, “I may be an adventurer, but I guess you’re a murderess. Yes,
gentlemen, here’s your death explained, and without any levitation. The
poor girl is writing a will in my favour; her cursed sister comes in,
struggles for the pen, drags her to the well, and throws her down before
she can finish it. Sakes! I reckon we want the handcuffs after all.”</p>
<p>“As you have truly remarked,” replied Joan, with ugly calm, “your clerk is
a very respectable young man, who knows the nature of an oath; and he will
swear in any court that I was up in your office arranging some typewriting
work for five minutes before and five minutes after my sister fell. Mr.
Flambeau will tell you that he found me there.”</p>
<p>There was a silence.</p>
<p>“Why, then,” cried Flambeau, “Pauline was alone when she fell, and it was
suicide!”</p>
<p>“She was alone when she fell,” said Father Brown, “but it was not
suicide.”</p>
<p>“Then how did she die?” asked Flambeau impatiently.</p>
<p>“She was murdered.”</p>
<p>“But she was alone,” objected the detective.</p>
<p>“She was murdered when she was all alone,” answered the priest.</p>
<p>All the rest stared at him, but he remained sitting in the same old
dejected attitude, with a wrinkle in his round forehead and an appearance
of impersonal shame and sorrow; his voice was colourless and sad.</p>
<p>“What I want to know,” cried Kalon, with an oath, “is when the police are
coming for this bloody and wicked sister. She’s killed her flesh and
blood; she’s robbed me of half a million that was just as sacredly mine as—”</p>
<p>“Come, come, prophet,” interrupted Flambeau, with a kind of sneer;
“remember that all this world is a cloudland.”</p>
<p>The hierophant of the sun-god made an effort to climb back on his
pedestal. “It is not the mere money,” he cried, “though that would equip
the cause throughout the world. It is also my beloved one’s wishes. To
Pauline all this was holy. In Pauline’s eyes—”</p>
<p>Father Brown suddenly sprang erect, so that his chair fell over flat
behind him. He was deathly pale, yet he seemed fired with a hope; his eyes
shone.</p>
<p>“That’s it!” he cried in a clear voice. “That’s the way to begin. In
Pauline’s eyes—”</p>
<p>The tall prophet retreated before the tiny priest in an almost mad
disorder. “What do you mean? How dare you?” he cried repeatedly.</p>
<p>“In Pauline’s eyes,” repeated the priest, his own shining more and more.
“Go on—in God’s name, go on. The foulest crime the fiends ever
prompted feels lighter after confession; and I implore you to confess. Go
on, go on—in Pauline’s eyes—”</p>
<p>“Let me go, you devil!” thundered Kalon, struggling like a giant in bonds.
“Who are you, you cursed spy, to weave your spiders’ webs round me, and
peep and peer? Let me go.”</p>
<p>“Shall I stop him?” asked Flambeau, bounding towards the exit, for Kalon
had already thrown the door wide open.</p>
<p>“No; let him pass,” said Father Brown, with a strange deep sigh that
seemed to come from the depths of the universe. “Let Cain pass by, for he
belongs to God.”</p>
<p>There was a long-drawn silence in the room when he had left it, which was
to Flambeau’s fierce wits one long agony of interrogation. Miss Joan
Stacey very coolly tidied up the papers on her desk.</p>
<p>“Father,” said Flambeau at last, “it is my duty, not my curiosity only—it
is my duty to find out, if I can, who committed the crime.”</p>
<p>“Which crime?” asked Father Brown.</p>
<p>“The one we are dealing with, of course,” replied his impatient friend.</p>
<p>“We are dealing with two crimes,” said Brown, “crimes of very different
weight—and by very different criminals.”</p>
<p>Miss Joan Stacey, having collected and put away her papers, proceeded to
lock up her drawer. Father Brown went on, noticing her as little as she
noticed him.</p>
<p>“The two crimes,” he observed, “were committed against the same weakness
of the same person, in a struggle for her money. The author of the larger
crime found himself thwarted by the smaller crime; the author of the
smaller crime got the money.”</p>
<p>“Oh, don’t go on like a lecturer,” groaned Flambeau; “put it in a few
words.”</p>
<p>“I can put it in one word,” answered his friend.</p>
<p>Miss Joan Stacey skewered her business-like black hat on to her head with
a business-like black frown before a little mirror, and, as the
conversation proceeded, took her handbag and umbrella in an unhurried
style, and left the room.</p>
<p>“The truth is one word, and a short one,” said Father Brown. “Pauline
Stacey was blind.”</p>
<p>“Blind!” repeated Flambeau, and rose slowly to his whole huge stature.</p>
<p>“She was subject to it by blood,” Brown proceeded. “Her sister would have
started eyeglasses if Pauline would have let her; but it was her special
philosophy or fad that one must not encourage such diseases by yielding to
them. She would not admit the cloud; or she tried to dispel it by will. So
her eyes got worse and worse with straining; but the worst strain was to
come. It came with this precious prophet, or whatever he calls himself,
who taught her to stare at the hot sun with the naked eye. It was called
accepting Apollo. Oh, if these new pagans would only be old pagans, they
would be a little wiser! The old pagans knew that mere naked
Nature-worship must have a cruel side. They knew that the eye of Apollo
can blast and blind.”</p>
<p>There was a pause, and the priest went on in a gentle and even broken
voice. “Whether or no that devil deliberately made her blind, there is no
doubt that he deliberately killed her through her blindness. The very
simplicity of the crime is sickening. You know he and she went up and down
in those lifts without official help; you know also how smoothly and
silently the lifts slide. Kalon brought the lift to the girl’s landing,
and saw her, through the open door, writing in her slow, sightless way the
will she had promised him. He called out to her cheerily that he had the
lift ready for her, and she was to come out when she was ready. Then he
pressed a button and shot soundlessly up to his own floor, walked through
his own office, out on to his own balcony, and was safely praying before
the crowded street when the poor girl, having finished her work, ran gaily
out to where lover and lift were to receive her, and stepped—”</p>
<p>“Don’t!” cried Flambeau.</p>
<p>“He ought to have got half a million by pressing that button,” continued
the little father, in the colourless voice in which he talked of such
horrors. “But that went smash. It went smash because there happened to be
another person who also wanted the money, and who also knew the secret
about poor Pauline’s sight. There was one thing about that will that I
think nobody noticed: although it was unfinished and without signature,
the other Miss Stacey and some servant of hers had already signed it as
witnesses. Joan had signed first, saying Pauline could finish it later,
with a typical feminine contempt for legal forms. Therefore, Joan wanted
her sister to sign the will without real witnesses. Why? I thought of the
blindness, and felt sure she had wanted Pauline to sign in solitude
because she had wanted her not to sign at all.</p>
<p>“People like the Staceys always use fountain pens; but this was specially
natural to Pauline. By habit and her strong will and memory she could
still write almost as well as if she saw; but she could not tell when her
pen needed dipping. Therefore, her fountain pens were carefully filled by
her sister—all except this fountain pen. This was carefully not
filled by her sister; the remains of the ink held out for a few lines and
then failed altogether. And the prophet lost five hundred thousand pounds
and committed one of the most brutal and brilliant murders in human
history for nothing.”</p>
<p>Flambeau went to the open door and heard the official police ascending the
stairs. He turned and said: “You must have followed everything devilish
close to have traced the crime to Kalon in ten minutes.”</p>
<p>Father Brown gave a sort of start.</p>
<p>“Oh! to him,” he said. “No; I had to follow rather close to find out about
Miss Joan and the fountain pen. But I knew Kalon was the criminal before I
came into the front door.”</p>
<p>“You must be joking!” cried Flambeau.</p>
<p>“I’m quite serious,” answered the priest. “I tell you I knew he had done
it, even before I knew what he had done.”</p>
<p>“But why?”</p>
<p>“These pagan stoics,” said Brown reflectively, “always fail by their
strength. There came a crash and a scream down the street, and the priest
of Apollo did not start or look round. I did not know what it was. But I
knew that he was expecting it.”</p>
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